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Perceptual/Behavioural Barriers to Creating Sustainable Cities
 

 

Institutional / Structural Barriers
Economic, Financial, and Market Barriers

National and Sub-National Barriers
Overcoming Barriers

  • Lack of understanding about the issues.
  • Overwhelming complexity of the issue.
  • Lack of knowledge/information: "We don't know enough" or "we're not really sure" are too often (as in the case of global climate change) convenient excuses for inaction. The lack of complete, or completely accurate, knowledge is not a valid reason for failing to act on whatever we can reasonably believe is likely to be true.
  • Uncertainty.
  • Competing issues.
  • Differences in perception.
  • Acceptance of the status quo.
  • Perceived lack of empowerment.
  • Perceived inequity.
  • Attention pressure. When two interests compete directly, those of local concern and immediate results win more often than not.
  • Lack of a catalytic personality. Catalytic personalities can facilitate tremendous change within an institutional structure. Through their actions they are often able to motivate others. If such a personality does not believe in the value of certain policies, then implementation may not be as thorough as if such a person was championing them among his/her peers.
  • Reductionist engineering and professional mindsets (fallibility and inflexibility of "accepted wisdom" and ways of doing things).
  • Citizens disunited/not supportive.
  • Media's presentation of information. The selection of media content can create tremendous barriers to the implementation of policies. Because the media shapes public perception and therefore plays a crucial role in the functioning of democratic systems, failure to present information comprehensively leads to biasing of the readers, and issues that are omitted have less chance of becoming part of public consciousness (Rees and Wackernagel, 1992).
  • Disjunction between verbal support and willingness to take action. Policies that are verbally supported by the public often fail because in practice citizens do not comply.
  • Inertia of the built environment: The physical fabric of a community - its buildings, streets, and infrastructure - does not change readily or quickly. But all these elements do in fact change over time; all are replaced or renewed sooner or later. The sustainable community does not seek wholesale or radical overnight disruption of the built environment, which experience has shown to be costly in social as well as financial terms. It only seeks to ensure that as change takes place, it is assessed against sustainability objectives and criteria and is carried out in a sustainable way.
  • Time horizons and conflicting interests: Perhaps above all, the pursuit of sustainability cannot evade the reality of conflicting interests arising to a great extent out of wide differences in the time scales involved. The benefits of a sustainable community to be gained in the long run are not likely to compensate most people for the prospective loss of a job, a market or an election in the short run. Working to shape a sustainable community means neither ignoring or minimizing such issues, nor abandoning the attempt in the face of them, but finding ways to address them effectively.

Jennie Moore: What's Stopping Sustainability: http://www.newcity.ca/Pages/mooreindex.html

India

Sweden

Argentina

Central Europe

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